The Mysterious Affair at Styles

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Title The Mysterious Affair at Styles

dust-jacket illustration of the first edition
Author Agatha Christie
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Crime novel
Publisher Bodley Head
Released 1920
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 195 pages
ISBN NA (& reissue ISBN 1-58734-006-2)

The Mysterious Affair at Styles (written in 1916 and published in 1920) is a detective fiction novel by Agatha Christie. It is her first novel, and introduces Hercule Poirot, Chief Inspector Japp and Captain Arthur Hastings. The novel is told in first person by Hastings, and features many of the elements that, thanks to Christie, have become icons of the Golden age of detective fiction. It is set in a large, isolated country manor; there are half-dozen suspects, most of whom are hiding facts about themselves; the book includes maps of the house, the murder scene and a drawing of a fragment of a will; and there are a number of red herrings and surprise plot twists.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The novel is set in England during World War I at Styles, an English country manor. Late one night, the residents of Styles wake to find Emily Inglethorp dying of what proves to be strychnine poisoning. Captain Hastings, a house guest, enlists the help of his friend Hercule Poirot, who is staying in the nearby village, Styles St Mary.

Poirot pieces together events surrounding the murder. On the day she was killed, Emily Inglethorp was overheard arguing with someone, most likely her husband, Alfred, or her stepson, John. Afterwards, she seemed quite distressed and, apparently, made a new will - which no one can find. She ate little at dinner and retired early to her room with her document case. The case was later forced open by someone and a document removed. Alfred Inglethorp left Styles earlier in the evening and stayed overnight in the nearby village, so was not present when the poisoning occurred. Nobody can explain how or when the strychnine was administered to Mrs Inglethorp.

At first, Alfred is the prime suspect. He has the most to gain financially from his wife's death, and, since he is so much younger than Emily was, the Inglethorpes already despise him as a fortune hunter. Evelyn Howard, Emily's companion, seems to hate him most of all. His behaviour, too, is suspicious; he openly purchased strychnine in the village before Emily was poisoned, and although he denies it, he refuses to provide an alibi. The police are keen to arrest him, but Poirot intervenes by proving he could not have purchased the poison. Scotland Yard police later arrest Emily Inglethorp’s oldest stepson, John Cavendish. He inherits under the terms of her will, and there is evidence to suggest he also had obtained poison.

Poirot clears Cavendish by proving it was, after all, Alfred Inglethorp who committed the crime, assisted by Evelyn Howard, who turns out to be his cousin, not his enemy. The guilty pair poisoned Emily by adding a precipitating agent to her regular evening medicine, causing its normally innocuous strychnine constituents to sink to the bottom of the bottle where they were finally consumed in a single, lethal dose. Their plan had been for Alfred Inglethorp to incriminate himself with false evidence, which could then be refuted at his trial. Once acquitted, he could not be tried for the crime a second time should any genuine evidence against him be discovered.

cover of a later printing
cover of a later printing

  • Captain Hastings, on leave from the Western Front
  • Hercule Poirot, a famous Belgian detective exiled in England
  • Chief Inspector Japp of Scotland Yard
  • Emily Inglethorp, a wealthy old woman
  • Alfred Inglethorp, her much younger new husband
  • John Cavendish, her elder stepson
  • Mary Cavendish, John's wife
  • Lawrence Cavendish, John's beautiful younger brother
  • Evelyn Howard, Mrs. Inglethorp's companion
  • Cynthia Murdoch, the beautiful, orphaned daughter of a friend of the family
  • Dr. Bauerstein, a suspicious toxicologist

  • Styles was also the setting of Poirot's last book, Curtain, published in 1975.
  • Supposedly based on a murder in Mussoorie; a doctor administered slow poison to a rich patient who also happened to be his lover. The patient succumbed when the doctor was conveniently away and the murder was never conclusively solved. The British press carried the scoop and noted author Rudyard Kipling wrote to Arthur Conan Doyle to write a story centred around the mysterious death. Conan Doyle mentioned it to Agatha Christie and the thriller The Mysterious Affair at Styles was born.

The story was adapted for television in 1990 for Series Two of Agatha Christie's Poirot. The adaptation was generally faithful to the novel, with some minor characters left out. The cast included:

Agatha Christie
Detectives: Hercule PoirotMiss Marple Tommy and Tuppence Ariadne Oliver Arthur Hastings Superintendent Battle Chief Inspector Japp Parker Pyne
Novels: The Mysterious Affair at StylesThe Secret Adversary Murder on the Links The Man in the Brown Suit The Secret of Chimneys The Murder of Roger Ackroyd The Big Four The Mystery of the Blue Train The Seven Dials Mystery The Murder at the Vicarage The Sittaford Mystery Peril at End House Lord Edgware Dies Murder on the Orient Express Three Act Tragedy Why Didn't They Ask Evans? Death in the Clouds The A.B.C. Murders Murder in Mesopotamia Cards on the Table Death on the Nile Dumb Witness Appointment with Death And Then There Were None Murder is Easy Hercule Poirot's Christmas Sad Cypress Evil Under the Sun N or M? One, Two, Buckle My Shoe The Body in the Library Five Little Pigs The Moving Finger Towards Zero Sparkling Cyanide Death Comes as the End The Hollow Taken at the Flood Crooked House A Murder is Announced They Came to Baghdad Mrs McGinty's Dead They Do It with Mirrors A Pocket Full of Rye After the Funeral Hickory Dickory Dock Destination Unknown Dead Man's Folly 4.50 From Paddington Ordeal by Innocence Cat Among the Pigeons The Pale Horse The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side The Clocks A Caribbean Mystery At Bertram's Hotel Third Girl Endless Night By the Pricking of My Thumbs Hallowe'en Party Passenger to Frankfurt Nemesis Elephants Can Remember Postern of Fate Curtain Sleeping Murder
As Mary Westmacott: Giant's BreadUnfinished Portrait Absent in the Spring The Rose and the Yew Tree A Daughter's a Daughter The Burden
Short story collections: Poirot InvestigatesPartners in Crime The Mysterious Mr. Quin The Hound of Death The Thirteen Problems Parker Pyne Investigates The Listerdale Mystery Murder in the Mews The Regatta Mystery The Labours of Hercules Poirot's Early Cases The Harlequin Tea Set
Plays: AkhnatonThe Mousetrap Witness for the Prosecution Verdict Rule of Three Fiddlers Three
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